home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- POLITICS, Page 64CALIFORNIACalifornia Schemin'
-
-
- A trove of electoral votes helps Bush forget his dislike of
- the Golden State
-
- BY MICHAEL DUFFY
-
-
- George Bush hasn't been seen rollerblading in Wayfarers
- and spandex biking shorts down the Pacific Coast Highway, but
- judging from the ardent way he has been wooing California for
- the past few months, it may be only a matter of time. After
- blowing off California during his first two years in the White
- House, Bush has lately turned to blowing it kisses. He has
- assured Californians how much he enjoys visiting them, telling
- a Los Angeles audience in September that his wife Barbara
- "likes, just plain likes coming out to California." And he vows
- to keep coming back.
-
- If this seems like an election-eve conversion, it should.
- The President doesn't really like much about California except
- its trove of 54 electoral votes, 20% of the total he needs to
- win a second term. His weird Tex-prep political roots have
- always put him culturally closer to Barbara Mandrell than to
- Michelle Pfeiffer. As an Administration official explained, "I
- don't think Bush has ever had an affinity for the place. He
- finds the culture rather alien." In his autobiography, Bush
- mournfully recalled the late 1940s when he worked as a traveling
- drill-bit salesman in California's dusty oil fields. Bush spent
- his days dreaming of Texas. "Barbara and young George couldn't
- wait to get back," he wrote. "Neither could I."
-
- Being Ronald Reagan's Vice President left Bush no choice
- but to cater to the California operatives who turned the White
- House into an imperial palace and presidential events into
- Hollywood extravaganzas. But he escaped whenever he could. While
- Reagan fled Washington for the mountains north of Santa Barbara,
- Bush preferred the rocky coast of Maine -- about as far from
- Malibu as he could get without leaving the continental U.S.
-
- His unease grew worse during the 1988 presidential
- campaign. Bush resisted his handlers' desire to schedule repeat
- visits to the state, understandably reluctant to appear at
- campaign stops alongside such silly cartoon characters as the
- Three Little Pigs and a trio of purple, rug-cutting California
- Raisins. Luckily for Bush, his advisers prevailed: he narrowly
- won the state, eking out a 51% majority with the help of
- last-minute appearances by home state hero Reagan, two of them
- the day before the election.
-
- Once elected, Bush did his best to ignore California.
- White House chief of staff John Sununu got into several ugly
- rows with then Senator Pete Wilson, who was running for
- Governor and charged that the White House was treating
- California as just another "account."
-
- By February 1990, California Republicans were feeling so
- scorned and abused that Bush set out to repair the rift. That
- spring, Sununu and the late Lee Atwater mended fences with
- several dozen big-dollar fund raisers at the Orange County home
- of developer Donald Bren. More recently, Wilson invited Sununu
- to Sacramento for his swearing-in.
-
- By rights, Bush shouldn't have to do so much to woo
- California Republicans. His natural moderation should appeal to
- the average California Republican, who is fiscally conservative
- but socially more liberal than most G.O.P. voters in other
- states. But Bush's hard-line opposition to abortion -- adopted
- to placate his party's right flank -- lands him to the right of
- 60% of California's G.O.P. conservatives, according to a private
- Republican poll. And his refusal to ban all oil drilling off the
- coast places his ecological credentials in question in a state
- where everyone is an environmentalist.
-
- But what really gives Bush the creeps is the dark portents
- California holds for the future of the Republican Party. The
- whirlwind that the G.O.P. sowed nationally with its antitax
- campaigns -- and its neglect of highways, schools and other
- public services -- has touched down in California, battering
- Wilson and tearing the state G.O.P. apart. The antitax revolt
- that was started by California Republicans and culminated in
- Bush's "read my lips" campaign of 1988 has hardened voters so
- indiscriminately against taxes that those same Republicans can't
- govern after they're elected. Trapped in their own antitax
- rhetoric, they find that voters are refusing to pay for programs
- that even Republicans support. Like Wilson, Bush nearly lost
- control of his party during a bloody budget fight last year.
- Abortion could cause even bigger battles in Bush's party -- and
- not only in California.
-
- These demons, plus the state's ailing economy, make
- winning California a formidable challenge for Bush. A White
- House strategist put it this way, "In 1992, there will be two
- campaigns: California and everywhere else." Those dancing
- raisins may soon find themselves in presidential company again.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-